|
Reginald Cudlipp (11 December 1910–21 January 2005) was a British newspaper editor. Cudlipp was born in Cardiff and was the second of three brothers. He followed his older brother, Percy, to become a journalist on the ''Penarth News'', before joined the ''Western Mail'' as a sub-editor. In 1938, he became a sub-editor on the ''News of the World'', based in London.〔Michael Leapman, "(Reg Cudlipp ), ''The Independent'', 26 January 2005〕 Cudlipp joined the Royal Artillery during World War II. He spent much of his time in the Army as associate editor of ''Phoenix Magazine''.〔Bob Warren, "(Reg Cudlipp - Former editor, News of the World )", ''Press Gazette'', 11 February 2005〕 At the end of the war became the ''News of the Worlds New York correspondent. He returned to London in 1948, and was promoted to become editor in 1953. Both Percy and his younger brother Hugh had already edited national newspapers.〔 As editor, Cudlipp maintained the paper's reputation for reporting on sex scandals and serialising romantic novels. However, circulation fell from eight million to six-and-a-half million copies per issue, and he resigned in 1959. In 1961, he became director of the Anglo-Japanese Economic Institute and edited ''Japan'', its journal. He remained director until 1986, and in 1982 was the first Briton to be awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasure.〔 ==References== 〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Reg Cudlipp」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|